My Weather

This has been a project in the back of my mind for some time, receiving signals from some of the far out spacecraft that we have sent up from Earth. Some of these spacecraft are now way too far out for me to receive but there are still some that are within reach.

Reception is usually nothing more than receiving the pilot carrier from the transmitter, getting enough signal to noise for deciding the telemetry and data is just not going to happen without a very large antenna... way beyond my current 3.2m dish!

The path loss is quite extreme when we are talking about Astronomical units in distance! for example at the time of writing the Mars spacecraft are about 1.9AU away from Earth, that's around 284 million km
This distance takes over 15 minutes to get to if you were travelling at the speed of light, so now you know what i mean by extreme...

The frequency of interest is 8.4GHz.

The inspiration for getting to work on the project was passing by M0EYT's uhf-satcom site once again a few weeks back and finally deciding to have a go..
here is the link: http://www.uhf-satcom.com/

After gathering a few parts for this project over the last year or so i decided to put the system together, It consists of an Elcom Synthesiser, an unknown 8GHz receive converter from eBay and a home made LNA made from satellite LNB parts.

The dish initially for testing was a regular 80cm offset satellite dish.

Here is the converter and synthesiser:

Rx/LO

7-8.5GHz band converter (internally filtered) and Elcom synthesiser normally for 11.2-12GHz but re-tuned to 4/5 output on 9.352GHz - high side LO input at >+5dBm for best operation.